Thursday, 31 October 2013

Goa Honeymoon Tour Packages Online

Goa is a well known tourist destination famous for beaches. It is one of the best options for newly married couples. After the ceremony of marriage couples are mostly choosing to celebrate their honeymoon in a place where they can spend quality time in tranquil and lovely environment of nature with chirping of birds, a gentle hush of waves thus a better solution for them is Goa. Its' known as the most romantic place for couples and attracts its unspoiled beauty of sandy beaches, splendid sunsets, peaceful atmosphere, inviting waves of clear blue sea makes it unique and perfect destination for newly married couples. Every year thousands of tourists from across the planet especially Europe visit Goa and celebrate their honeymoon. All the good things that make a holiday work are here.

There is something to suit each budget, starting, from cheap shacks to-let on the beach and going on to long-stay self-catering apartments, pensions, clean but basic rooms in small hotels, suites in five-star luxury resorts to rival the best in the world and finally themed designer rooms in truly exclusive boutique hotels that promise a whole different holiday experience. It would take forever to list options under every category, but here's a list of some of the best high-end accommodation that Goa has to offer.

Goa is also popular for seafood aficionados. It is not all about fish curry and rice, however. The fruits do Meir can't get fresher and the Goans treat them with respect, lightly poaching, grilling or baking their fish without drowning it in sauces and spices and including clams, squid, crabs, lobster and prawns regularly in their meals. On the other hand, if spice and serious meat is what you want, you've come to the right place again - the Portuguese-influenced vindaloos, sports, Richards beaches and stalwarts of Goan catholic kitchens are basically beef and pork centric, redolent of toddy-based vinegar and worthy challenges for the most chili seasoned palates. The Hindu cuisine (xacutis, shakes, ambotiks, forgets) is mostly vegetarian but when meat based uses chicken and lamb and features plenty of coconut milk, tamarind and Kokum for tang. The curries are normally eaten with Goan red rice, poi, a leavened Goan bread or sauna, steamed crescent shaped dumplings. Dessert is always bebinca, the layered sweet pancake that uses eggs, flour, butter, sugar and coconut milk in its batter and takes eight hours to make or dodhol, a heady combination of coconut milk and jiggery reduced over a slow fire until thick and creamy.

The Portuguese ruled "Golden Goa' their eastern capital city that once rivaled Lisbon in its magnificence, for almost 400 years, executive mass conversions to Christianity at the point of a sword, dotting its paddy fields with white washed churches, defending its coastline from powerful forts, infusing its food with exotic flavors from across the seas and giving this strip of India a 'creole' character all of its own. But throughout this long occupation, a small percentage of the local Hindus resisted the conversions, building their temples, worshiping their gods and making certain Hindu. Goa was as alive as the Christian one. Small wonder then, that most of the must-sees in the state comprise places of worship. But if monuments and places of worship don't you, never fear. There is plenty to do in Goa for the nature enthusiast as well.